I have it now.If you get the scratch installer working (which I think will be problematic without the mysql bits which give me problems) I have the rest of the process working... will be updating soon. Watch http://svn.linuxmce.org/trac.cgi/ticket/1256 and follow whatever directions are there.

I don't have time atm to fix the scratchmaster... but should only be a couple of lines to change to use the pluto_main for version control getting mysql happy in chroot.

# and no longer use the local ubuntu mirror.cat $TEMPDIR/etc/apt/sources.list.d/ubuntu.org >> $TEMPDIR/etc/apt/sources.list# Make sure fluffy is not in the list of available repositoriesLC_ALL=C chroot $TEMPDIR apt-get update

I wanted to mention with the latest, to remove the allow-hotplug in lines 75 & 78. As experiments go, not so much. Was trying to cut down the time for networking restart. I set that file that way btw, because on my laptop I go back and forth between wired and wireless networks, so setting them both to dhcp default gets me live. If you create the file, you probably won't require that at all... but this way it works no matter what you are on or doing.

I would like to know this as well... Need to redo my install and the wife is not relying on lmce at the moment, so would be a good time to be an alpha/beta tester. About to cook dinner, so just going to try and see what happens.

Will create the root image necessary to build an iso from. This will be a dd image, named, simply: 1004That will live somewhere with the other files in ticket 1256You will need the latest versions in that thread of the following...splash.pngdvd-installer.shGeneralFunctions.shlmcemaster.sh

Updated.Thanks, and I plan on it (more work on the menu). I just need to figure out how to change the text colors. I figured out the timer... lol... but yes those will change.

Just something to be aware of... this looks different on a "real" display. The second menu has the orange progress meter, for instance, and tux isn't so huge during installer.

Keep in mind, beyond looking somewhat nicer, the real benefits of this process are:1 The DVD is only 1.6 Gb2 Almost everything is pre-installed. You do not need to download very much at all3 It is one stage, unlike before where you install Kubuntu and then do our install. After choosing your options for the base install (pic 3, normal ubiquity install), it goes through its install sequence, a post installer (the OSD part), reboots and goes straight to AVWizard.4 Because we have options from jump, it can be dual booted.

Ok... so with the recent changes made to allow for IPv6, my external network process eats turd... so for this very second, once you get in after firstboot on hard drive, you have no internet without manually configuring your interfaces file, say at avwizard.